---
title: Trigger hooks
sidebarTitle: Triggering
description: Triggering tasks from your frontend application.
---

We provide a set of hooks that can be used to trigger tasks from your frontend application.

<Note>
  For triggering tasks from your frontend, you need to use “trigger” tokens. These can only be used
  once to trigger a task and are more secure than regular Public Access Tokens. To learn more about
  how to create and use these tokens, see our [Trigger
  Tokens](/realtime/auth#trigger-tokens-for-frontend-triggering-only) documentation.
</Note>

## Hooks

We provide three hooks for triggering tasks from your frontend application:

- `useTaskTrigger` - Trigger a task from your frontend application.
- `useRealtimeTaskTrigger` - Trigger a task from your frontend application and subscribe to the run.
- `useRealtimeTaskTriggerWithStreams` - Trigger a task from your frontend application and subscribe to the run, and also receive any streams that are emitted by the task.

### useTaskTrigger

The `useTaskTrigger` hook allows you to trigger a task from your frontend application.

```tsx
"use client"; // This is needed for Next.js App Router or other RSC frameworks

import { useTaskTrigger } from "@trigger.dev/react-hooks";
import type { myTask } from "@/trigger/myTask";
//     👆 This is the type of your task, include this to get type-safety

export function MyComponent({ publicAccessToken }: { publicAccessToken: string }) {
  //                         pass the type of your task here 👇
  const { submit, handle, error, isLoading } = useTaskTrigger<typeof myTask>("my-task", {
    accessToken: publicAccessToken, // 👈 this is the "trigger" token
  });

  if (error) {
    return <div>Error: {error.message}</div>;
  }

  if (handle) {
    return <div>Run ID: {handle.id}</div>;
  }

  return (
    <button onClick={() => submit({ foo: "bar" })} disabled={isLoading}>
      {isLoading ? "Loading..." : "Trigger Task"}
    </button>
  );
}
```

`useTaskTrigger` returns an object with the following properties:

- `submit`: A function that triggers the task. It takes the payload of the task as an argument.
- `handle`: The run handle object. This object contains the ID of the run that was triggered, along with a Public Access Token that can be used to access the run.
- `isLoading`: A boolean that indicates whether the task is currently being triggered.
- `error`: An error object that contains any errors that occurred while triggering the task.

The `submit` function triggers the task with the specified payload. You can additionally pass an optional [options](/triggering#options) argument to the `submit` function:

```tsx
submit({ foo: "bar" }, { tags: ["tag1", "tag2"] });
```

#### Using the handle object

You can use the `handle` object to initiate a subsequent [Realtime hook](/realtime/react-hooks/subscribe#userealtimerun) to subscribe to the run.

```tsx
"use client"; // This is needed for Next.js App Router or other RSC frameworks

import { useTaskTrigger, useRealtimeRun } from "@trigger.dev/react-hooks";
import type { myTask } from "@/trigger/myTask";
//     👆 This is the type of your task

export function MyComponent({ publicAccessToken }: { publicAccessToken: string }) {
  //                         pass the type of your task here 👇
  const { submit, handle, error, isLoading } = useTaskTrigger<typeof myTask>("my-task", {
    accessToken: publicAccessToken, // 👈 this is the "trigger" token
  });

  //     use the handle object to preserve type-safety 👇
  const { run, error: realtimeError } = useRealtimeRun(handle, {
    accessToken: handle?.publicAccessToken,
    enabled: !!handle, // Only subscribe to the run if the handle is available
  });

  if (error) {
    return <div>Error: {error.message}</div>;
  }

  if (handle) {
    return <div>Run ID: {handle.id}</div>;
  }

  if (realtimeError) {
    return <div>Error: {realtimeError.message}</div>;
  }

  if (run) {
    return <div>Run ID: {run.id}</div>;
  }

  return (
    <button onClick={() => submit({ foo: "bar" })} disabled={isLoading}>
      {isLoading ? "Loading..." : "Trigger Task"}
    </button>
  );
}
```

We've also created some additional hooks that allow you to trigger tasks and subscribe to the run in one step:

### useRealtimeTaskTrigger

The `useRealtimeTaskTrigger` hook allows you to trigger a task from your frontend application and then subscribe to the run in using Realtime:

```tsx
"use client"; // This is needed for Next.js App Router or other RSC frameworks

import { useRealtimeTaskTrigger } from "@trigger.dev/react-hooks";
import type { myTask } from "@/trigger/myTask";

export function MyComponent({ publicAccessToken }: { publicAccessToken: string }) {
  const { submit, run, error, isLoading } = useRealtimeTaskTrigger<typeof myTask>("my-task", {
    accessToken: publicAccessToken,
  });

  if (error) {
    return <div>Error: {error.message}</div>;
  }

  // This is the Realtime run object, which will automatically update when the run changes
  if (run) {
    return <div>Run ID: {run.id}</div>;
  }

  return (
    <button onClick={() => submit({ foo: "bar" })} disabled={isLoading}>
      {isLoading ? "Loading..." : "Trigger Task"}
    </button>
  );
}
```

### useRealtimeTaskTriggerWithStreams

The `useRealtimeTaskTriggerWithStreams` hook allows you to trigger a task from your frontend application and then subscribe to the run in using Realtime, and also receive any streams that are emitted by the task.

```tsx
"use client"; // This is needed for Next.js App Router or other RSC frameworks

import { useRealtimeTaskTriggerWithStreams } from "@trigger.dev/react-hooks";
import type { myTask } from "@/trigger/myTask";

type STREAMS = {
  openai: string; // this is the type of each "part" of the stream
};

export function MyComponent({ publicAccessToken }: { publicAccessToken: string }) {
  const { submit, run, streams, error, isLoading } = useRealtimeTaskTriggerWithStreams<
    typeof myTask,
    STREAMS
  >("my-task", {
    accessToken: publicAccessToken,
  });

  if (error) {
    return <div>Error: {error.message}</div>;
  }

  if (streams && run) {
    const text = streams.openai?.map((part) => part).join("");

    return (
      <div>
        <div>Run ID: {run.id}</div>
        <div>{text}</div>
      </div>
    );
  }

  return (
    <button onClick={() => submit({ foo: "bar" })} disabled={isLoading}>
      {isLoading ? "Loading..." : "Trigger Task"}
    </button>
  );
}
```
